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Adele Ginzberg (Katzenstein)

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Frankfurt, Darmstadt, Hesse, Germany
Death: May 10, 1980 (93)
Place of Burial: New York, United States
Immediate Family:

Daughter of Michael Katzenstein and Sophie Katzenstein
Wife of Professor Louis I. (Levi Isaac) Ginzberg
Mother of Professor Eli Ginzberg and Sophie Gould
Sister of Martha Katzenstein and Private

Managed by: Howard Kaye
Last Updated:

About Adele Ginzberg

Source of following article: https://jwa.org/encyclopedia/article/ginzberg-adele

Born on May 11, 1886, in Frankfurt-am-Main, Germany, daughter of Michael and Sophie Katzenstein and older sister of Max and Martha, Adele (Katzenstein) Ginzberg moved to Berlin at age eight after her mother’s sudden death. She received basic schooling and then, unable to study nursing as she wanted, she instead worked briefly in her father’s real estate office.

Adele married Louis Ginzberg in 1909 and moved to New York. They had two children, Sophie (Ginzberg) Gould and Eli Ginzberg, professor of economics and director of the Eisenhower Center for Conservation of Human Resources at Columbia University.

Ginzberg first became involved in community affairs with the Liberty Bond Campaign during World War I. From 1920 on, she was closely associated with National Women’s League. Serving as its representative on several national and international organizations, she also wrote a monthly column in its magazine, Outlook. She was instrumental in initiating the Girl Scout project in 1946, which led to the establishment of the Menorah Award for Jewish Girl Scouts. Ginzberg was also devoted to aiding the blind through the Jewish Braille Institute.

Ginzberg, together with her husband, unofficially took over the Schechters’ role as “Mr. and Mrs. Seminary.” A fearless woman with an irreverent personality and colossal energy, Ginzberg brought great vitality to the seminary community. She hosted open houses on Shabbat and holidays and invited each member of the seminary’s senior rabbinical school class for Shabbat lunch. After her husband’s death in 1953, Ginzberg continued to invite students for Shabbat meals. Ginzberg was also long noted for decorating the Jewish Theological Seminary’s sukkah, which is named in her memory. Finally, Ginzberg was one of the few of her generation to join the struggle for equal rights for women in synagogue ritual life.

In recognition of her varied talents and influence, Ginzberg was honored as New York State Mother of the Year in 1966, was inducted in the seminary’s Honorary Society of Fellows in 1976, and was awarded the Mathilde Schechter Award posthumously in 1980. Ginzberg died in New York City on May 10, 1980.

Ginzberg exemplified those women whose status and influence derive initially from their illustrious husbands, but who used their position to educate and enrich Jewish life on their own terms. She conveyed the vitality of Jewish life to generations of Conservative Jews and inspired many to adopt a forward-thinking stance.

BIBLIOGRAPHY

AJYB 82:365–366; Ginzberg, Eli. Keeper of the Law (1966); “Irrepressible, Unforgettable, ‘Mama G.’” Outlook 21 (Fall 1980): 4, 20–21; “Presentation of Mathilde Schechter Award.” Women’s League Biennial Convention Proceedings (1980): 74–77; “Quotable Quotes.” Scope (February 1964): 2; Shenker, Israel. “Adele Ginzberg, at 90, Says, ‘So What?’” NYTimes, May 16, 1976; United Synagogue of America. National Women’s League. They Dared to Dream: A History of National Women’s League, 1918–68 (1967).

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Adele Ginzberg's Timeline

1886
May 11, 1886
Frankfurt, Darmstadt, Hesse, Germany
1911
April 30, 1911
New York, New York, United States
1914
January 30, 1914
New York, New York, United States
1980
May 10, 1980
Age 93
????
New York, United States